Fiction. "SNAKEHUNTER is an excellent novel about a West Virginia childhood. Kinder has, to begin with, a good sense of his he has rested his story on the firmest possible bases, namely character and place. His dialogue, particularly that of his female characters, is first rate.... One would like to secure for this excellently crafted book all the readers one can."—Larry McMurty, The Washington Post
Chuck Kinder was an American novelist. Kinder was a professor of English at the University of Pittsburgh, where he taught from 1980 until his retirement in 2014.
I took the author's class at the University of Pittsburgh. I got so much out of the class and book. His storytelling is both bad-ass (I can think of no other way to describe it) and lyrical and completely original. A poetic, bad-boy's voice. I couldn't put it down.
Kinder navigates themes of love, loss, and the human condition in this coming of age novel, which impresses me as autobiography. It's a blend of humor and touching moments. Speer, the main character, lives in the small town of Century, West Virginia. A cousin of his, Herk, is a bully and beats up Speer on a regular basis. His mother is divorced, and sister Cynthia is often ailing. Speer is close to his older cousin, Catherine, an intellectual who reads a lot and writes a novel. No publishing houses pick it up, however. She drinks a lot and gets tipsy from couch syrup. This experimental novel has an odd structure. Told in the first person, sometimes in the present tense, other times in the past. And it jumps around in time. Also the plot is broken up by musings on tribal people, like the Maori, the Cherokees and Australian indigenous folks. In some respects, the story is about story construction itself. In any event, the prose is poetic and will resonate with readers. Kinder explores the message of the search for identity in this work on a boy in Appalachia.
A unique book of Appalachian Gothic recommended by a friend.
Snakehunter is a painful look of masculinity and the ways death through violence is present and swept under the rug. Some people can ignore it and normalize death; others normalize the dying, even when they cause it.
Absolutely amazing. Speer grows up in rural Virginia and writes about his life with a detached clarity. Often times funny and sad. The characters of this book will stick with me for a long time.